Lockdown

Chance has to rescue a man who is being held against his will by the company, he works for,a defense contractor, because he want to reveal that the company gave one of their weapons to a ...
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Storyline

Chance has to rescue a man who is being held against his will by the company, he works for,a defense contractor, because he want to reveal that the company gave one of their weapons to a country that's an enemy of the United States. All he has to do is break into a secured building, which he does but. But when his exit strategy is foiled he and the guy have to get out the hard way, with the company's entire security force after them. Winston and Guerrerro have to find a way to get the Feds involved but unfortunately they want more proof. Written by
rcs0411@yahoo.com

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Goofs

When Chance is skydiving, before the second flashback, the readout displays 1:30 (and counting) until he reaches the target. After, Winston gives the number as over 2 minutes - despite this being later into the dive. See more »

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User Reviews

Human Target delivers yet another 8/10 (though I haven't seen the Pilot), making this a very good series indeed. The main cast is solid as rock, and the guest star list after only six episodes is almost ridiculously impressive:

Tricia Helfer, a.k.a. Number Sex - sorry, Six - from the new BSG.

Mark Moses from Desperate Housewives (though I stopped watching some way into season two when the show started going bad).

Alessandro Juliani, also from BSG.

Courtney Ford from Dexter (Season 4).

Emmanuelle Vaugier from everything she's ever appeared in. We are *so* blessed she has a recurring role.

Cutegasm! Autumn Reeser, the best thing (tied with Rachel Bilson) from The O.C.

Holy Bureaucratic! Mitch Pileggi, also from The X Files. All we need now is Nicholas Lea to show up and we have a hat trick!

Now making these listings might become exhausting as the series progresses :)

But I digress. I praised the quality of effects in #1.2, "Rewind", but it seems they took so much budget that the effects in every episode since have been of lower quality. Here, for instance, there is some bad green-screen work when Chance makes a landing in the beginning of the episode... Fortunately, the rest of the episode features mostly practical effects and some pulse-pounding action sequences - when you get a quality whiff of Die Hard, you know this episode is a winner. This would be a 9/10 were there not an appearance of the infamous Enhance Button trope. We've seen that bull$#it for what, 30 years, now? Don't the show-runners know people are by now educated enough to know That. Image. Enhancing. From. Pixellated. Mush. Does. Not. Work, for frak's sake?

Still, this has become a weekly must-see.

3 of 4 people found this review helpful.
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